Abstract
Zygotes of the brown alga Fucus distichus L. Powell divide into two cells which are structurally and biochemically different from each other. Cytochemical staining and autoradiography indicate that a sulfated polysaccharide is localized in only one of the two cells. Up to 10 hr after fertilization, no localization of sulfated polysaccharides is detectable in zygotes, and little 35S (Na 2 35SO 4) is incorporated into an acid-soluble carbohydrate fraction. Between 10 and 16 hr, during rhizoid initiation and several hours before the first cell division, there is a large increase in the amount of 35S incorporated into this fraction. The label is found associated with the sulfated fucose polymer fucoidan. Various extraction techniques and labeling experiments demonstrate that fucoidan is unsulfated at fertilization and undergoes little metabolic activity or turnover during the first 24 hr. Thus, the incorporation of sulfate into this carbohydrate fraction appears to involve a sulfation of a preexisting, unsulfated fucan polymer. The degree of sulfation achieved at this time in vivo is sufficient for migration of fucoidan through an electric field in agarose or acrylamide gels. The possible role of sulfation as a mechanism for the localization of fucoidan in the rhizoid cell by means of an intracellular electrical gradient is discussed.
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